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Greenpeace response to NSW Police attacks on peaceful protesters in Sydney

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SYDNEY, Tuesday 10 February 2026 — In response to the violent attacks by NSW Police on peaceful protesters gathering in Sydney last evening, Dr Susie Byers, Head of Advocacy at Greenpeace Australia Pacific, said:

“The right to peaceful assembly is a fundamental pillar of a healthy democracy and a basic right of all Australians.

“The violent actions of NSW Police officers in Sydney last night are a significant escalation in the suppression of the right to protest in NSW, and part of a larger national trend of targeting and criminalising protesters. These actions have a chilling effect on democracy and peaceful protest in Australia, and are designed to curtail peaceful public dissent.

“These events can not be separated from what’s happening globally, with the erosion of civil liberties and rise of authoritarianism threatening democracy and human rights. Australia must not follow countries like the United States down this path.

“Greenpeace has a long and proud history of using nonviolent direct action and peaceful protest to achieve environmental protections and climate justice. Many of the freedoms and rights we cherish were won and defended when Australians stood up for what mattered — women’s right to vote, workers’ rights, and protecting the places we love from exploitation, from the Franklin River to the Great Barrier Reef.

“The NSW government must commit to protecting the right to protest and halt the introduction of further protest restrictions.”

-ENDS-

Media contact

Kate O’Callaghan on 0406 231 892 or kate.ocallaghan@greenpeace.org

Greenpeace response to NSW Police attacks on peaceful protesters in Sydney

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Climate Change

Local Barley Becomes Local Booze at a Wisconsin Distillery Prioritizing Ag Sustainability

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Farmers, distillers and other businesses are taking part in a “grain to glass” sourcing system that eliminates waste and keeps agriculture business within communities.

In the Driftless Area of Wisconsin, food and beverage businesses are partnering with organic farms in a small but growing effort to promote regenerative agriculture practices across the unique region, known for its uneven landscape of steep hillsides and deeply carved river valleys.

Local Barley Becomes Local Booze at a Wisconsin Distillery Prioritizing Ag Sustainability

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Climate Change

‘A Disaster Waiting to Happen’: How the Fracking Boom Put an Oil Field in the Guadalupe River Floodplain

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Lack of a state floodplain policy in Texas enabled oil companies to build in areas hit by an epic inundation less than 30 years ago.

GONZALES, Texas—More than 500 enormous oil tanks dot the floodplains of the Guadalupe River and its tributaries where they cross one of Texas’ leading oilfields, an Inside Climate News investigation has found, posing risk of an environmental disaster.

‘A Disaster Waiting to Happen’: How the Fracking Boom Put an Oil Field in the Guadalupe River Floodplain

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